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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (abdominal pain)
31,184 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Serous surface carcinoma (SSC) of the peritoneum is defined as a primary tumor histologically indistinguishable from serous carcinoma of the ovary, diffusely involving the peritoneal surface but sparing or only superficially invading the ovaries. In this study of 22 cases of SSC, it was found that the main clinical manifestations of SSC were abdominal pain and enlargement. In most cases, SSC evenly involved the entire mesothelial surface but rarely was predominant in or even limited to the pelvis. It frequently invaded the submesothelium, but deep invasion into abdominal and pelvic organs or local metastasis was rare, and distant metastasis was not seen at presentation. Microscopically, SSC was a high-grade tumor frequently showing high mitotic rate, psammomas bodies, and necrosis. The tumor was usually contiguous with hyperplastic mesothelium on either ovarian surface or other locations. Tumor cells in all cases except one showed cytoplasmic or surface neutral or acidic mucin or both. Tumor cells stained positive for keratin (100% of cases), epithelial membrane antigen (100%), Leu-M1 (45%), B72.3 (85%), vimentin (35%), and carcinoembryonic antigen (25%). Electron microscopic studies of six cases showed epithelial differentiation in each. Seven patients (32%) were alive with no clinical disease at 3 to 31 months, one patient (4%) was alive with extensive local disease at 24 months, 11 patients (50%) died almost exclusively of local recurrence at 1 to 70 months, and three patients (14%) died of operative complications. It is concluded that SSC arises from peritoneal mesothelium but has epithelial phenotype. It can be morphologically differentiated from other conditions with similar laparotomy findings, such as malignant mesothelioma, benign papillary mesothelioma, cystic mesothelioma, and benign or borderline peritoneal serous tumors. The prognosis of SSC is poor, and most patients die of uncontrollable local disease.
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PMID:Serous surface carcinoma of the peritoneum: a clinicopathologic study of 22 cases. 168 45

A 57-year-old man with malaise, ascites, and abdominal pain was found to have a peritoneum studied with numerous, small nodular tumor masses. Light microscopy revealed an anaplastic malignant tumor of uncertain differentiation. Mucin stains were negative. Electron microscopy revealed pleomorphic tumor cells with diffusely distributed cytoplasmic tonofilaments and well-developed true desmosomes. No long, thin, branching microvilli were present, yet tumor cells were strongly positive for both callus keratin (polyclonal) and monoclonal cytokeratin (AE1/3) in a diffuse cytoplasmic distribution (a pattern corresponding to the diffuse cytoplasmic tonofilaments). Tumor cells were negative for Leu-M1 and carcinoembryonic antigen. The findings were most consistent with malignant mesothelioma, and additional questioning, after tissue diagnosis, revealed a work history of asbestos exposure.
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PMID:Malignant mesothelioma of peritoneum. 172 49

We report 38 cases of inflammatory fibrosarcoma occurring in 23 females and 15 males, 2 months to 74 years of age (median, 8.5 years; mean, 15 years) with symptoms of abdominal pain (17 cases), anemia (21 cases), fever (14 cases), mass (16 cases), and gastrointestinal obstruction (7 cases). Primary tumor sites included mesentery and retroperitoneum (31 cases), omentum (two cases), mediastinum (two cases), liver (one case), diaphragm (one case), and abdominal wall (one case). Sizes ranged from 2.4 cm to 20 cm (mean, 9.6 cm). Follow-up data in 27 cases revealed local recurrences in 10 patients, with multiple local recurrences in three and histologically proven distant metastases to lung (two cases) and brain (one case). Five patients died from their disease (median, 20 months). All tumors, including metastases, consisted of fibroblasts, myofibroblasts, and plasma cells, with variable degrees of fibrosis and calcification. Immunostains indicate myofibroblastic differentiation; 18 of 20 (90%) stained for actin, 15 of 18 (83%) for vimentin, and 10 of 13 (77%) for keratin (primarily in a submesothelial location). Ultrastructural studies also disclosed myofibroblastic features. The locally aggressive, recurrent nature of these neoplasms, as well as the occurrence of metastases and tumor deaths, indicate that they are potentially malignant neoplasms that we believe are better classified as inflammatory fibrosarcomas, not as cellular inflammatory pseudotumors.
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PMID:Inflammatory fibrosarcoma of the mesentery and retroperitoneum. A tumor closely simulating inflammatory pseudotumor. 174 82

An immunohistochemical study of a rare initial manifestation of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) in the ovaries is presented. There have been very few reports to date on immunohistochemical studies of lymphoma involving the ovaries. A 53-year-old woman suffering from lower abdominal pain and abnormal genital bleeding was diagnosed as having a tumor in her left ovary by ultrasonic echograms and CT scanning. The patient underwent a simple total hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomies. The tumor, measuring 14 x 10 x 10 cm, was located in the left ovary and extended to the major omentum, mesocolon and left ureter. The histology of the tumor was that of NHL showing diffuse proliferation of small cleaved cells. Immunohistochemical studies of the ovarian tumor showed that the tumor cells were of a B-cell lymphoma nature with LCA+, MB-1+, lambda+, keratin-, IgG-, IgM-, IgA-, kappa-, and MT-1-. Although the main lesion involved the ovary, the case could not be identified definitely as primary lymphoma of the ovary.
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PMID:Ovarian involvement as an initial manifestation of malignant lymphoma. 273 70

This report describes two patients with hepatic epithelioid hemangioendothelioma: a 33-year-old woman and a 28-year-old man. The first case presented with a palpable abdominal mass and has survived without treatment for 6 years since diagnosis, with ascites but a good general condition. The other patient presented with abdominal pain and cholestasis. He had a rapid course and death occurred 6 months after the onset of symptoms. Histologically the tumors consisted of a proliferation of neoplastic cells with an angiogenic tendency embedded in a myxohyaline stroma. Positivity for the factor VIII-related antigen, for UEA-I and for vimentin and negativity for keratin of the neoplastic cells in the immunohistochemical investigation permitted identification of their endothelial origin. In both cases, the initial diagnosis was erroneous.
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PMID:Epithelioid hemangioendothelioma of the liver: report of two cases. 313 May 36

A rare cystic lesion of the pancreas is reported. Morphologically, this unilocular cyst was filled with keratin material and lined by mature, keratinizing squamous epithelium; it was surrounded by lymphoid tissue and also focally by pancreatic tissue. Clinically, the lesion was associated with diarrhea and abdominal pain, both of which promptly disappeared after its removal. Although the histogenesis of this lesion is not known, it can be histologically differentiated from other pancreatic and retroperitoneal cysts. We propose the name "lymphoepithelial cyst" for this lesion and note that only one similar case has been described previously.
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PMID:Lymphoepithelial cyst of the pancreas. 367 87

We report a case of cystic mesothelioma of the peritoneum (CMP), a rare tumor. The magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings and the histochemical features were studied. The patient was an 18-year-old women who presented with upper abdominal pain. Abdominal ultrasonography and computed tomography showed a well defined cystic mass with a solid papillary projection in its lumen. MRI of the cyst showed high intensity on T2- and proton weighted images and low intensity on T1-weighted images, and the solid projection showed low intensity on T2- and proton-weighted images and slight low intensity on T1-weighted images, on which it was well enhanced. The lesion was suspected to be a benign cyst, such as a hemangioma, lymphangioma, or a splenic or pancreatic cyst. Complete surgical resection was performed. The resected specimen consisted of a unilocular cystic mass, with a solid projection, weighing 260 g and measuring 10 cm in diameter. The final diagnosis, arrived at by histopathological examination, was low-grade malignant CMP. The tumor cells were strongly positive for keratin, weakly positive for vimentin, and negative for epithelial membranous antigen. The patient is now well and symptom-free with no recurrence 19 months after operation. CMP is a rare tumor; only 12 cases have previously been reported in Japan.
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PMID:Cystic mesothelioma of the peritoneum. 902 54

We report the clinicopathologic, immunohistochemical, ultrastructural, and genetic features of an unusual renal tumor composed of large, atypical, densely packed, clear/eosinophilic epithelioid cells. Three patients, two men and one woman (ages 31, 36, and 60 years of age, respectively), had abdominal pain. Morphologically, all cases showed aggressive features (largeness, atypical cells, sarcomatoid features, necrosis, and, in one case, invasion of the renal vein). Despite the marked morphologic resemblance of these tumors to high-grade sarcomatoid renal cell carcinoma, their phenotype (HMB45+, CD68+/-, actin+/-, and vimentin and keratin negative) is in contrast to that observed in epithelial tumors and parallels the phenotypic profile of angiomyolipoma. Ultrastructural analysis showed the presence of glycogen, mitochondria, and prominent electron-dense, membrane-bound granules in the neoplastic cells, and the absence of melanosomes or premelanosomes. Genetic study, performed using polymerase chain reaction from paraffin sections, showed a loss of heterozygosity at the TSC2-containing region on 16p in one case, and on 3p in two cases, showing that multiple genetic alterations are taking place in these tumors. Follow-up has shown local recurrence in one case after 6 years, and the patient died 1 year later of cardiorespiratory failure. The other two patients are well after 26 and 10 months. All three patients were evaluated for signs of tuberous sclerosis, and findings were negative. We suggest that these tumors should be considered close relatives of the angiomyolipoma variants, composed purely of perivascular epithelioid cells. More cases and longer follow-up durations are needed to fully evaluate its prognostic implication.
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PMID:Carcinomalike monotypic epithelioid angiomyolipoma in patients without evidence of tuberous sclerosis: a clinicopathologic and genetic study. 963 Jan 73

A 67-year-old man presented with weight loss, intermittent severe abdominal pain and melaena. Initial radiology (including abdominal ultrasonography), gastroscopy and colonoscopy did not demonstrate any lesions that could explain the complaints. Three weeks later, upper gastrointestinal and small-bowel barium studies revealed two areas in the small intestine with an abnormal mucosal pattern. Explorative laparotomy revealed three tumoral lesions. Three partial enterectomies were performed. Gross examination showed centrally depressed dark reddish tumoral lesions extending from the mucosa throughout the full thickness of the bowel wall (diameter varying between 1.6 cm and 2.2 cm). The tumours, composed of large, plump, polygonal cells showing little architectural differentiation, were mainly situated in submucosa and muscularis propria. The growth pattern appeared rather solid. The epithelioid cells showed pronounced nuclear pleomorphism and atypia with central large nucleoli. There were several small blood vessels with occasional anaplastic endothelial cells. Immunohistochemical staining demonstrated an intense expression of CD 31, CD 34, factor VIII related antigen and keratin. This supported the diagnosis of an epithelioid angiosarcoma. The patient died 3 months after diagnosis. Tumours of the small intestine are very rare, and angiosarcomas of the small intestine are even more rare. Epithelioid variants have only been described in two patients and only one of these had a multifocal presentation. The prognosis is very poor. Because of the epithelioid growth pattern and the cytokeratin expression, these tumours may erroneously be diagnosed as a carcinoma.
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PMID:Multifocal epithelioid angiosarcoma of the small intestine. 1096 85

Lymphoepithelial cyst (LEC) of the pancreas is a rare lesion of undetermined pathogenesis that had been documented almost exclusively in males. The literature on this entity is limited to reports of single or small numbers of cases. Here is presented a clinicopathologic analysis of 12 patients with LEC, 4 of whom were female. The mean age of the patients was 56 years. Four patients presented with abdominal pain and nausea, but in two patients, the cysts were detected incidentally. Only one patient had a history of chronic pancreatitis, and another had a family member with pancreatic cancer. In one patient, a clinical diagnosis of pseudocyst was rendered, and the remaining patients were clinically thought to have cystic neoplasms. None of the patients had any identifiable immunosuppression, HIV positivity, autoimmune disorder (such as Sjogren syndrome) or lymphoma. Seven cysts were located in the head of the pancreas, and 5 were in the tail. The mean size was 4.8 cm (range, 1.2-17 cm). Five LECs were multilocular, three were unilocular; in others, the number of loculi was not recorded. All were "macrocystic" lesions. Two patients had two separate lesions, both in the tail of the pancreas. Histologically, all cases were characterized by cysts, some containing keratin, and lined by mature stratified squamous epithelium surrounded by dense lymphoid tissue, often with prominent follicles. In some areas, the lining epithelium had more cuboidal, flattened, or transitional appearance. Mucinous goblet-like cells were seen in one case. Acute inflammation was not seen. Four cases contained solid lymphoepithelial islands, a feature not previously described in LECs. No squamous metaplasia was identified in the uninvolved pancreatic tissue and no epithelial elements were identified in peripancreatic lymph nodes. In summary, LEC of the pancreas is a rare but distinctive lesion that may be seen in the tail of the organ where most cystic pancreatic neoplasms are encountered. In contrast to the impression from the literature, LECs may also develop in females and, therefore, should be considered in the clinical differential diagnosis of mucinous cystic neoplasms that affect a similar age group. LECs are not associated with the clinical syndromes that are seen with their analogues in the salivary glands.
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PMID:Lymphoepithelial cysts of the pancreas: a report of 12 cases and a review of the literature. 1201 Dec 54


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